In London, Usain Bolt celebrates, gymnasts prepare for the final day of individual competition and pins are traded

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August 7, 2012 4:45PM (UTC)

LONDON (AP) — Around the 2012 Olympics and its host city with journalists from The Associated Press bringing the flavor and details of the games to you:

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BOLT'S SWEDE EVENING

Usain Bolt claims he had a low-key celebration after winning the 100 meters. But what's that on Twitter?

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The world's fastest man tweeted a photo of himself and three Swedish handball players in the wee morning hours after his win.

"Whatcha want to know?" he replied after initially claiming he "just chilled."

"I went to the cafeteria to get some food, I saw them and we started talking. They wanted pictures. We chilled. I told them I had a great idea for a picture. So we took a picture."

— Jenna Fryer — Twitter http://twitter.com/jennafryer

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NO EYE CONTACT

The competitors are in the arena for the final day of individual gymnastics competition, and it's striking how quiet it is.

Gabby Douglas and Jordyn Wieber are going through some warmups on the floor, with Wieber doing her best Rocky impersonation by ripping off pushups and clapping her hands in the middle of each one.

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The competitors do not make eye contact, with their teammates or rivals, and hardly a word is being spoken.

It's singular focus, razor sharp concentration. For one more day.

— Jon Krawczynski — Twitter http://www.twitter.com/APKrawczynski

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QUICKQUOTE: BOLT ON LIU

"It's really hard, I think he's one of the best. He's showing the world he can do great things. For him to push himself and come back last year and for this to happen, it's really sad for any athlete," — Usain Bolt after Liu Xiang was forced out of the games with an injury in the the first heat of the 110-meter hurdles for the second Olympics in a row.

— Jenna Fryer — Twitter http://twitter.com/jennafryer

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CHINA STRUGGLES

China has been piling up medals again in London. Yet the team playing perhaps the most popular sport in the nation has struggled mightily at these games.

China's men's basketball team went 0-5 in pool play and looked lost without the retired Yao Ming. In one game it trailed Brazil by more than 40 points.

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Center Wang Zhizhi says he told coach Bob Donewald in 2010 that "there are two most difficult jobs in the world right now: One is saving the miners in Chile and the other is taking over Chinese men's basketball."

Donewald says it was an honor to be chosen for the post-Yao rebuilding process and just qualifying for the Olympics was a big step in the right direction for his team.

"But once we got here, it was a lot to chew," Donewald says. "Just a little bit too much."

The defending Olympic champion did his trademark pose and other animated antics during introductions.

Then he did what he always does. He ran fast and dominated the competition.

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He was already ahead of the field as he came off the turn, and then cruised home from there. He actually let up at the end.

Another day at the office for the world's fastest man.

— Jenna Fryer — Twitter http://twitter.com/jennafryer

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SPOTTED: DUCHESS OF CORNWALL

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Prince Charles' wife Camilla, the Duchess of Cornwall, has arrived for the triathlon in Hyde Park wearing a black baseball cap.

— Barbara Surk — Twitter http://twitter.com/BarbaraSurkAP

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BLING ENVY

People are staring at my chest — and I don't even have an Olympic medal.

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In the first week they were trying to work out if I was important by glancing at my Olympic accreditation. Now they are looking at my bling.

My Olympic pins, that is.

Forget pounds, euros, dollars. Pins are the true currency at the games. Some trade, some buy, some sell - although pin etiquette seems to frown slightly upon this.

You can't walk anywhere now — inside or outside an Olympic venue — without someone commenting on them. Transport workers and security staff beg you for one and pin collectors try and dupe you. If they see you have something of value — say a rare North Korea pin — then they are relentless in their attempts to make a trade.

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Not on your nelly, guys.

— Fergus Bell — Twitter http://twitter.com/fergb

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MISERABLE NOW

Not everybody likes the flag-waving of the Olympics, but few appear to hate it quite as much as indie rock icon Morrissey, who's back in his English homeland after a European tour.

"I am unable to watch the Olympics due to the blustering jingoism that drenches the event. Has England ever been quite so foul with patriotism?" Morrissey has just written in his blog for fans.

"The 'dazzling royals' have, quite naturally, hijacked the Olympics for their own empirical needs, and no oppositional voice is allowed in the free press. It is lethal to witness."

Last month, Morrissey complained that none of The Smiths' 1980s chart-topping UK hits was included in Danny Boyle's pop culture-infused opening ceremony for the London Games. Seems there's no pleasing some people.

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BLING ENVY

People are starring at my chest — and I don't even have an Olympic medal.

In the first week they were trying to work out if I was important by glancing at my Olympic accreditation. Now they are looking at my bling.

My Olympic pins, that is.

Forget pounds, euros, dollars. Pins are the true currency at the games. Some trade, some buy, some sell - although pin etiquette seems to frown slightly upon this.

You can't walk anywhere now — inside or outside an Olympic venue — without someone commenting on them. Transport workers and security staff beg you for one and pin collectors try and dupe you. If they see you have something of value — say a rare North Korea pin — then they are relentless in their attempts to make a trade.

Not on your nelly, guys.

— Fergus Bell — Twitter http://twitter.com/fergb

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LIU XIANG HOPS OUT OF GAMES

Liu Xiang is out of the London Games — and he had to leave on one foot.

The 2004 Olympic champion crashed on the first hurdle of his 100-meter heat. He grabbed his lower right leg and hopped toward the closest exit. Officials, however, directed him to the other end of Olympic Stadium. Liu then hopped the entire stretch of the track on his left foot, even pausing near the end for a break.

— Jenna Fryer — Twitter http://twitter.com/jennafryer

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MORE CHAOS AT THE HURDLES

It's not getting any easier at the hurdling.

Within two strides of heat six the Hungarian runner pulled up with a muscle injury — and things quickly got worse.

Liu Xiang, the 2004 Olympic champion, slammed his leading foot into the first hurdle and crashed down.

For the second straight Games, Liu — who was injured at his home Beijing Olympics — got to the start line but never cleared a single hurdle.

Injured, he hopped to the side, down the track, then was taken away in a wheelchair.

Two lanes along, the Barbados athlete also fell at the first and the Senegal athlete was later disqualified.

— Graham Dunbar — Twitter: http://twitter.com/gdunbarap

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HURDLE CARNAGE

The 110 hurdles started (or didn't) with a disqualification for the Madagascar runner who jumped the gun in lane three.

When it did get going, the Bahamas runner took a tumbling forward roll fall and was also disqualified.

The British runner failed to finish.

The Trinidad and Tobago runner clattered to the line leaving behind a trail of 10 splayed hurdles.

Even the Olympic Stadium announcer saw the humorous side.

It was time to "clean up the carnage" after heat three on Tuesday morning, the packed Olympic Stadium was told.

— Graham Dunbar — Twitter: http://twitter.com/gdunbarap

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8 DOWN, STILL GOING STRONG

Italian kayaker Josefa Idem became the first woman to compete in eight Olympic Games when she set off in her heat for the 500-meter K-1 at Dorney Lake on Tuesday.

The 47-year-old Idem's first summer games were in Los Angeles in 1984 and she has finished fifth or higher at each Olympics. She won gold in Sydney in 2000 and missed out on another in Beijing four years ago when she was edged into silver by four-hundredths of a second. Idem, who was born in Germany but became an Italian citizen in 1992, finished third in her heat to reach the semifinals later Tuesday.

— Steve Douglas — Twitter http://twitter.com/sdouglas80

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BRING EAR PLUGS

There are bigger venues than the velodrome to be at in Olympic Park on Tuesday. None will be louder.

The British team, which has dominated the 'drome with five gold medals in the first seven events in the building, could rack up three more in a span of about 30 minutes Tuesday evening.

Chris Hoy is trying to defend his title in the keirin, Victoria Pendleton defends her title in the women's sprint, and Laura Trott tries to win her second gold of the London Games in the multidiscipline women's omnium.

Don't forget your ear plugs.

— Jon Krawczynski — Twitter http://www.twitter.com/APKrawczynski

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PUMP UP (OR DOWN?) THE VOLUME

AP's Jill Lawless likens a walk around Olympic Park to a non-stop musical mystery tour — part of a boisterous policy that aims to keep spectators pumped up with songs wafting from speakers and half-heard snatches of music mixing with the roar of the crowds at venues:

"Three songs have been impossible to escape at these games. "Heroes" by David Bowie has been adopted as the British team's anthem. "Gold" by Spandau Ballet is the BBC's song of choice for medal-winners. And Vangelis' theme from "Chariots of Fire" is played loudly and often in all sorts of venues.

For games venues, organizers have a list of 2012 songs arranged into playlists to suit the mood. The music is predominantly British, but includes global stars like U2, Jay-Z and Britney Spears.

But the act that gets the most negative reaction is — sacrilege! — The Beatles. Some volunteers have been heard grousing about how much of the Fab Four's music is being played in the park.

Others joke about how often Paul McCartney has popped up at the games — playing the opening ceremony, turning up for cycling and track competitions, leading the inevitable audience sing-alongs of "Hey Jude" and "All You Need Is Love."

EDITOR'S NOTE — "Eyes on London" shows you the Olympics through the eyes of Associated Press journalists across the 2012 Olympic city and around the world. Follow them on Twitter where available with the handles listed after each item, and get even more AP updates from the Games here: http://twitter.com/AP_Sports